While I have my own theories on what
makes various shows work or not work for me, I can’t help but notice some
correlation between the attractiveness of the lead characters and my tendency
to gravitate towards the show.
Let’s look at my top two dramas,
Grimm and Person of Interest. David Giuntoli and Jim Caviezel are both very
attractive men. In addition, Caviezel has a certain physicality to which I am
very susceptible.
I guess it is a combination of
kinetic energy and grace. How can I explain this? From the ads for “A Perfect
Murder” I had decided that Viggo Mortensen was quite good-looking, but seeing
him sword-fighting and bashing heads in “The Lord of the Rings” took it to a
whole new level. When someone who has
this quality is going to be doing a lot of action, it looks promising to me.
It’s not always logical—the Bourne movies did nothing for me, but somehow Matt
Damon’s fight scene in “Stuck on You” did, and the Bond movies are overkill for
me, but Daniel Craig slamming Paul Dano into the bars in “Cowboys & Aliens”
was great. Thank you for not judging.
Anyway, the thing that is interesting
about this is that Alcatraz should have had a slam dunk here with Jeffrey
Pierce. In both attractiveness and physicality he may be superior to both
Giuntoli and Calviezel, and I do not make that claim lightly because they are
beautiful and watchable men.
(Giuntoli is still my favorite, if
for no other reason that he is single and I have a strong inner taboo against
being attracted to married men, even for celebrity crushes. He gets a lot of
Twitter proposals, though, so his days may be numbered.)
Alcatraz completely squandered what
they had in Pierce. They wasted him! They created a really sympathetic
character. He had a string of bad luck, but a minor robbery got him into
federal prison, self-defense got him into Alcatraz, and there he was abused and
lost the wife he adored. Pierce was nailing the emotions, and you could not
take your eyes off of him. Okay, he’s a criminal, but fairly redeemable at that
point, right? So let’s just have him kill four people in the first episode, two
of them cops, one probably not as an effect of the brainwashing, and then see
what you can do with him.
When I first saw the ads for
Alcatraz, seeming Pierce moving is what sent me looking it up, and he wasn’t
even in the main cast. I did some more digging, and saw he was a prisoner, but
he was in multiple episodes, so I thought for sure that he would end up helping
them, being an ally from the other side. Nope. They did not do anything
interesting with him.
I realize that more use would not
have fit in to their original model for the show, but if you are panning for
gold and you happen to find a diamond, you don’t throw it away for not being
gold. He was a diamond. Remember how The West Wing was supposed to focus on the
staff and not the president, but then they changed it because Martin Sheen was
so great? Yeah, then you may also remember that it got seven seasons. You know
who’s canceled? Alcatraz.
One could argue that misuse of
Jeffrey Pierce is merely one symptom of a general tendency to pursue bad ideas
for that particular show. One the plus side, it occurs to me that Pierce would
be perfect for, well, I’m calling it Foresight for now, but I don’t think
that’s a particularly good title, and I hope to come up with a better one. He’s
a little older than originally envisioned, but it totally works.
I see that I have gone off on a
related tangent again, but my point is that it is a little unnerving to wonder
how much of my television viewing is influenced by attractiveness. After all,
with the existing series recording, White Collar, well, Matt Bomer is
exceedingly pretty.
Is it really that I didn’t find
Portlandia funny? Or is it that Fred Arminsen is not that good-looking? Is my
problem with Leverage that I am only mildly attracted to Christian Kane (who
beats up people very well)? Do I prefer Modern Family to Parks and Recreation
because I prefer family-based humor to workplace humor, or is it that I think
Ty Burrell is more attractive to Rob Lowe? Well, no, that’s not it.
Once Upon a Time may be the one that
saves me here. Josh Dallas is not really my type, they tend to kill off the
ones who are, and really my favorite is Robert Carlyle, who is not
traditionally good-looking and is certainly not played up that way, but he’s
captivating! And yet, here I go, uncomfortable thinking that I might be unduly
influenced by attractiveness, and only able to defend myself by pointing out
people I like who would be considered less attractive. This is just not good.
I’m going with that I like shows where there are
likeable characters, good ensembles, writing that is logical but not
necessarily predictable—at least I hope so. I mean, if I were truly shallow,
wouldn’t I always be watching CW?
No comments:
Post a Comment